Đặt câu với từ "beechnuts"
1. Green Beechnuts Stock Images by hoptrop 1 / 174 green Beechnuts Stock Photography by hoptrop 0 / 94 European Beechnuts Pictures by vencavolrab 2 / 38 Beechnuts and husks
2. Some interviewees eat Beechnuts …
3. Footnotes for Nuts, Beechnuts, dried
4. Add to Likebox #23069426 - Beechnuts on wooden table
5. Add to Likebox #38884132 - One Beechnuts lying on …
6. What does Beechnuts mean? Plural form of beechnut
7. Beechnuts contain oxalic acid, alkaloids and trimethylamine and are therefore slighly
8. Uses: Beechnuts are collected and enjoyed by many in the fall
9. Beechnuts appear to be safe, if perhaps not all that palatable
10. Beechnuts stock photos and images (182) Best Match Fresh
11. Each of the paired Beechnuts was made by a …
12. Beechnuts Submitted by Martha Eakin on Sun, 06/22/2008 - 16:50
13. The distinctive appearance of Beechnuts is a common way to identify beech trees
14. Add to Likebox #74004660 - Beechnuts beech tree on a snowy twig
15. Went out for some bushcraft and foraging Beechnuts in the early autumn
16. The Beechnuts were food for prehistoric man and are still consumed today
17. One of the great features of fall is the ripening of Beechnuts
18. #72731876 - Wet Beechnuts and seeds of maple on a rock in the river
19. The ancient Greeks believed that Beechnuts or ‘mast’ were the first food eaten by humans
20. Add the wet ingredients into the dry ingredients, and then add in the chopped Beechnuts…
21. Hunting in Maine: Acorns, chestnuts and Beechnuts – a prime food source for game
22. Beechnuts was constructed in 1976, the property offers spacious accommodation throughout with plentiful storage
23. During migration, it selects overwintering sites according to the density of acorns and beechnuts.
24. Apart from their Sweet taste, Beechnuts is a good source of nutrients, vitamins and minerals
25. Beechnuts are eaten by birds and mammals, serving as an important food for chipmunks and squirrels
26. Beechnuts are structured like Chestnuts, and considered the same kind of fruiting structure by the morphologist
27. People who like to collect wild foods may harvest Beechnuts as part of a larger meal
28. Beech tree fruit, also called Beechnuts, are identifiable by their brown color and unique three-angled look
29. Beechnuts come from the beechnut tree, which is native to numerous places on the planet and comes in a number of species
30. Beechnuts can make a great snack food, especially in regions where the trees grow wild along paths and hiking trails
31. 1-1/2 cups Beechnuts 1 (9-inch) unbaked or frozen deep-dish pie crust Preheat oven to 350°F
32. Farmers also take advantage of Beechnuts to supplement the diets of their livestock, cracking or grinding the shells so that animals can
33. Preparation: Depending on the time of harvest, the spiny husks of Beechnuts will be open, and the nuts relatively easy to remove
34. Beechnuts were eaten by Native Americans and to a lesser extent by the early colonists, primarily when more desirable agricultural and faunal food sources were scarce
35. In years rich in beechnuts and spruce cones young birds dismigrated into higher, even unsettled, altitudes partly as far up as the mountain crests.
36. The American beech produces edible brown fruit called Beechnuts, typically 1/2 to 1 1/2 inches in size, contained in husks covered in soft spines
37. The abundance and distribution of acorns and beechnuts in regions further south are believed to influence the start of migration and the selection of wintering sites (Smith and Scarlett 1987).
38. Ducking under a branch loaded with Beechnuts took me back a lot of years to when I was 5, 6 and 7, and I spent large portions of the summer with my Grandma, in Mansfield.
39. Beechnuts remain an incredibly important, nutrient-dense food source for black bear, as well as for white-tailed deer, Wild Turkey, Ruffed Grouse, Wood Duck, woodpeckers, and more than a dozen other mammals and birds
40. Beechnuts are small, less than half- inch in diameter, but sweet and similar in flavor to chestnuts — though they are richer (their fifteen percent of fat, by weight, is nearly four times that of chestnuts)
41. Recent Examples on the Web Hunting, fishing, and foraging were part of everyday life in the 17th century, and one abundant source of food was hard mast, such as Beechnuts, hickory, chestnuts, and even acorns
42. Foods and Their Adulteration: Origin, Manufacture, and Composition of Food by Harvey Washington Wiley (1917) "In the cutting of the forests in the winter often large stores of Beechnuts are found stored away by squirrels and birds.
43. Consuming 28.35 gram of Beechnuts offers 14.18 g of Total Fat, 0.19 mg of Copper,0.38 mg of Manganese,0.194 mg of Vitamin B6, 0.7 mg of Iron,0.105 mg of Vitamin B2, 32 µg of Vitamin B9, 9.5 g of Carbohydrate, 0.086 mg of Vitamin B1 and 288 mg of Potassium.